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Decodes the long history of Hebrew and its influential place as the
ancestor of many modern written languages Hebrew as a language is
just over 3,000 years old, and the story of its alphabet is unique
among the languages of the world. Hebrew set the stage for almost
every modern alphabet, and was arguably the first written language
simple enough for everyone, not just scribes, to learn, making it
possible to make a written record available to the masses for the
first time. Written language has existed for so many years-since
around 3500 BCE-that most of us take it for granted. But as Hoffman
reveals in this entertaining and informative work, even the idea
that speech can be divided into units called "words" and that these
words can be represented with marks on a page, had to be
discovered. As Hoffman points out, almost every modern system of
writing descends from Hebrew; by studying the history of this
language, we can learn a good deal about how we express ourselves
today. Hoffman follows and decodes the adventure that is the
history of Hebrew, illuminating how the written record has
survived, the significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls and ancient
translations, and attempts to determine how the language actually
sounded. He places these developments into a historical context,
and shows their continuing impact on the modern world. This
sweeping history traces Hebrew's development as one of the first
languages to make use of vowels. Hoffman also covers the dramatic
story of the rebirth of Hebrew as a modern, spoken language. Packed
with lively information about language and linguistics and history,
In the Beginning is essential reading for both newcomers and
scholars interested in learning more about Hebrew and languages in
general.
Decodes the long history of Hebrew and its influential place as the
ancestor of many modern written languages Hebrew as a language is
just over 3,000 years old, and the story of its alphabet is unique
among the languages of the world. Hebrew set the stage for almost
every modern alphabet, and was arguably the first written language
simple enough for everyone, not just scribes, to learn, making it
possible to make a written record available to the masses for the
first time. Written language has existed for so many years-since
around 3500 BCE-that most of us take it for granted. But as Hoffman
reveals in this entertaining and informative work, even the idea
that speech can be divided into units called "words" and that these
words can be represented with marks on a page, had to be
discovered. As Hoffman points out, almost every modern system of
writing descends from Hebrew; by studying the history of this
language, we can learn a good deal about how we express ourselves
today. Hoffman follows and decodes the adventure that is the
history of Hebrew, illuminating how the written record has
survived, the significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls and ancient
translations, and attempts to determine how the language actually
sounded. He places these developments into a historical context,
and shows their continuing impact on the modern world. This
sweeping history traces Hebrew's development as one of the first
languages to make use of vowels. Hoffman also covers the dramatic
story of the rebirth of Hebrew as a modern, spoken language. Packed
with lively information about language and linguistics and history,
In the Beginning is essential reading for both newcomers and
scholars interested in learning more about Hebrew and languages in
general.
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